Dr. Chipman,
Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen,
It is a privilege to speak at this institution which has shaped the
international discourse on strategic issues so significantly over so
many decades. My talk today is on India and international security.
I hope to share with you how India perceives the changing
international environment and how we assess its impact on our
prospects.
2. At independence, it was natural that the primary task of
India’s foreign and security policies was to enable India to begin
the process of economic and social transformation that a poor and
backward country required. The immediate objectives were therefore a
peaceful environment, strategic space and autonomy, free of
entanglement in Cold War conflicts or alliances. Non-alignment, as
this policy was called was the ability to judge issues on their
merits and their effect on India’s interests, or, as our first Prime
Minister Nehru used to say, ‘enlightened self-interest’.
3. Six decades later, we face a different world. The end of
the Cold War, accelerating processes of globalization and the
salience of trans-national challenges characterize the current
global scene. India too has undergone a profound internal change
during this period. Economic growth and modernization are
transforming our society at an unprecedented pace. The impact of
technology is being increasingly felt. Movements of goods, services,
capital and people connect us more closely than ever to once distant
societies. Our engagement with the global economy is growing
rapidly, with trade in goods and services now exceeding US$ 330
billion. Our needs from the world have changed, as has our
capability. And this is reflected in how India perceives its own
future, its ties with its neighbourhood and its approach to the
larger international order.
4. Today, it is no
longer possible for India to envisage security – internal or
international – in traditional terms. A combination of greater
inter-dependence, applications of technology and new vulnerabilities
have created challenges that could not have been imagined earlier.
The threat of terrorism, the prospects of pandemics or the damage of
cyber crime are manifestations of problems faced by a more
industrialized and integrated world. Allow me to illustrate this by
looking at India’s neighborhood, at global issues and at the
international order.
India’s Neighborhood
5. The first circle of our external security interests is
constituted by India’s immediate neighbourhood. South Asia has
lagged well behind the level of inter-dependence that characterizes
many other regions, particularly Europe. From India’s perspective,
we are acutely conscious that a peaceful periphery is a
pre-requisite to sustain our growth and development. The
challenge, therefore, is to encourage our neighbours to see the
possible gains from a more active engagement. In the last decade,
countries like Bhutan or Sri Lanka who have sought to leverage
India’s growth to their benefit have benefitted greatly. Our hope is
that this will embolden our other neighbours. For its part, India is
prepared to take a long term view of these relationships and to take
unilateral steps to put them on a better footing.
6. The prospects of
creating a peaceful periphery are complicated by the reality that
each of our neighbours is undergoing its own political and social
transformation. A brief survey would give you a feel for the
challenges. The Afghanistan-Pakistan border region currently
elicits the greatest concern. The regrouping and resurgence of the
Taliban in a swathe of territory west of the Indus on both sides of
the Durand Line threatens stability well beyond the area itself. The
last year has seen the emergence of an area of anarchy under
terrorist and extremist control west of the Indus. Each local
accommodation with the Taliban has made the war on terrorism more
disjointed and segmented. The assumption that there might be “good
Taliban” who might be politically accommodated is most dangerous. Al
Qaeda and the Taliban are allied with and extend reciprocal support
to a host of jehadi groups operating out of Pakistan. These groups
have been responsible for much of the cross border terrorism
directed against India. The London and Madrid train bombings also
lead to the same networks.
7. This is not to underestimate what Afghanistan has achieved. Over
4 million refugees have returned home, elections have been held
freely and fairly, and the economy is enjoying double-digit growth.
India is making a long term and heavy investment in Afghanistan for
the same reasons as you are. We cannot afford to see the country
once again becoming a cockpit and breeding ground for extremist
ideologies and terrorism. India has committed US $750 million to
Afghan reconstruction and 3500 Indians are working in Afghanistan.
What is essential is to create the security that Afghanistan needs
to recover.
8. The security
situation in Afghanistan cannot be addressed without Pakistan’s
active cooperation. It is our belief that the political stability
and economic prosperity of Afghanistan is in the interests of both
Pakistan and India. We have offered to work together with Pakistan
for Afghanistan’s recovery. Afghanistan can still re-emerge as what
Toynbee called a “roundabout” of history, a region where routes
converge and radiate, by hosting energy corridors for oil and gas
and transit routes between some of the world’s great emerging
markets. But this would require all of us in the region to work
together.
9. A stable, moderate and prosperous Pakistan at peace with
itself and its neighbours is in India’s interest.In the last
three years, the composite dialogue has greatly improved the
atmosphere between India and Pakistan, addressing all issues
including Jammu & Kashmir, bilaterally. For the first time in sixty
years, over four thousand people have been legally permitted to
cross the LOC. Unfortunately, however, despite a Joint
Anti-Terrorism Mechanism, more remains to be done by Pakistan to
curb cross-border terrorism which continues with seasonal
fluctuations. For India, it is crucially important that Pakistan
fulfill its commitment not to permit any territory under its control
to be used to support terrorism in any manner.
10. Nepal is
going through a difficult double transition, building a stable
democratic political order while attempting to mainstream the
Maoists peacefully. The fundamental decisions on the direction and
nature of change lie with the people of Nepal. India has extended
its full support to Nepal in ensuring the success of this process,
and will continue to do so. Another transformation is being
attempted in Bangladesh. As a neighbour and friend, India
wishes for a democratic, stable and prosperous Bangladesh. In Sri
Lanka conflict, violence and terrorism continue. The recent
intensification of armed conflict, which has led to renewed refugee
flows to India, is particularly worrying. As the conflict continues
we see the induction of new capabilities. Only dialogue can lead to
a sustainable and lasting solution to the conflict acceptable to all
sections of Sri Lankan society within the framework of a united Sri
Lanka.
11. Despite the risks that I have outlined, taken as a whole, the
subcontinent is moving in a positive direction. It is one of the
fastest growing regions of the world, and a free trade area has come
into existence (with only Pakistan opting out). The recent SAARC
Summit in New Delhi showed that the countries of South Asia see an
opportunity for benefit in India’s growth and have the will to seize
it. The risks and dangers are primarily political and from
terrorism.
12. China is
India’s largest neighbour. Her rise represents a new opportunity to
remake our relations and settle outstanding issues. There is space
enough and opportunity for both countries to grow. The challenge for
us both is to translate this understanding into action in a
transparent manner taking into account the continuous development of
our capabilities.
13. As we move beyond Southern Asia to India’s extended
neighbourhood of West Asia, Central Asia, South East Asia and the
Indian Ocean region, we see other potential challenges and
opportunities. West Asia is an important source of India’s energy
needs, an increasingly significant trade partner and home to nearly
4.5 million people of Indian origin. Yet the potential for conflict
and continued instability in West Asia is high. Proliferation in
North East Asia and west of India are clearly not in India’s
security interest.
14. From the broader perspective, we regard our security as lying in
a neighborhood of widening concentric circles. It is often said that
the logic of geography is unrelenting. Geography gives India a
unique position in the geo-politics of the Asian continent, with
our footprint reaching well beyond South Asia and our interests
straddling across different sub-categories of Asia – be it West
Asia, East Asia, South-east Asia or Central Asia. We share one of
the longest land borders in the world with China, Central Asia
verges on our northern frontiers, we have land and maritime borders
with three South East Asian countries, our Andaman and Nicobar
islands are just over one hundred kilometers from Indonesia, and our
exclusive economic zone spans the waters from the Persian Gulf to
the Straits of Malacca.
15. It is clear that
a major realignment of forces is taking place in Asia.
Besides the emergence of the Indian and Chinese economies, Japan is
playing a greater role in regional stability and security. The key
to ensuring long-term stability and security in Asia lies in the
collective ability of Asian countries to build mutual economic
stakes in each other, and to construct an open regional security
architecture, as ARF and other organizations are attempting to do.
16. At the risk of simplifying, I would say that India’s security
interests in its neighbouring regions are met by a peaceful South
Asia, a stable West Asia, a dynamic ASEAN and a developing and
stable Central Asia. Significantly our current engagement in
security affairs in Asia in expanding circles starting with the
immediate neighbourhood parallels our growing economic interaction
with the same region from Sri Lanka in South Asia to ASEAN and
further East to Japan.
Global Issues
17. Despite some political turbulence around India, the real
factors of risk that threaten systemic stability come from larger,
global issues like terrorism and proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction. (Hence the significance of Pakistan as these issues
enter our region from Pakistan.) As the world globalizes, technology
ensures that our threats also globalize. Our security planning must
therefore increasingly deal with crosscutting or transnational
issues: energy security, the environment, non-proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction, and, most significantly,
terrorism. It seems apparent that no single country can deal
with these issues alone and that they require global solutions which
involve all the major powers.
18. Some
trans-boundary issues have the greatest part of their solutions in
our immediate and extended neighborhood. These include food security
and water issues. Our effort is to create a web of cooperative
partnerships in areas such as water and flood control. There are
others such as energy security and climate change which are global
in their nature and impact.
19. For instance, let me give you an idea of the challenge that
India faces in seeking energy security. The average
consumption of electricity per capita each year in India is
currently only 550 kwH against a global average of 2430 kwH, a US
average of 13070 kwH and a Chinese figure of 1380 kwH. At a
projected growth rate of 8% a year through 2031-32, the minimum
necessary to eradicate poverty, India needs to increase its primary
energy supply by 3 to 4 times, and its electricity generation
capacity by 5 to 6 times current levels. By 2031-2, power generation
capacity must increase to nearly 800,000 Mwe from the current
capacity of 160,000 Mwe. And more than half of this will still have
to come from coal. I must add here that even though we have been
growing by over 8% there has been effective decoupling of our GDP
growth from energy consumption and we have not followed the fuel
fuelled growth seen in the OCED.
20. Since earlier
this century most hydrocarbon exports from the Gulf region have
begun to flow eastwards. The major consumers and major producers of
energy are all in Asia. There are fears of a competitive scramble,
spiraling prices and plummeting growth. The debate on climate change
has acquired starker dimensions in this background. For India clean,
convenient and affordable energy is a critical necessity for
improving the lives of our people. This would imply massive imports
of oil and even coal, which is not as abundant as was believed. Can
India afford to follow this path? What are the other options
available given that we are short of energy resources like oil, gas
and uranium? What does each of these options entail? In our
discussions with the UK, EU and US on energy security, we have come
to the conclusion that international cooperation in civil nuclear
energy can be a significant addition to our own efforts. This is the
fundamental premise behind the India-US understanding on civil
nuclear energy cooperation. We would need to build other
partnerships as well, on technology cooperation in renewable and
efficient use of energy, and on cooperative development of energy
supply chains with new suppliers in West Africa, Central Asia and
Latin America. The EU in particular is a valued partner in our
energy dialogue. India is an active participant in the International
Thermonuclear Energy Research (ITER) project to develop fusion
energy as a future source of clean and cheap energy sponsored by the
EU.
21. Linked to energy
security is the issue of global warming and climate change.
The international community already has an instrument to deal with
the challenge of climate change in the form of the painstakingly
negotiated Kyoto Protocol. More than 50% of GHG emissions are
currently from OECD countries. India with 17% of the world’s
population accounts for only 4% of such emissions. And yet the
adverse effects of global warming caused by accumulated and
continued high emissions by industrial countries will largely be
felt by developing countries. These unsustainable patterns of
consumption and production must be tackled on an urgent basis. It is
imperative that the developed countries in the Kyoto Protocol
urgently commit themselves to truly higher levels of GHG reductions
as compared to the first commitment period and conclude these
negotiations quickly. This will also spur the enlargement of the
carbon market and give a fillip to private sector involvement in
clean technologies and investment.
23. We all need additional paradigms for tackling climate change
comprehensively. These include access to clean technologies by
developing countries both through new R&D efforts, including
collaborative R&D focusing on the resource endowments of developing
countries, and by addressing the IPR issue. The IPR issue has been
dealt with some success in the case of HIV/AIDS. A similar effort is
required for clean technologies that would balance the rewards for
the innovators with the common good of humankind.
24. We have recently
begun hearing of linkage between climate change and international
peace and security. Developed countries reducing their GHG emissions
and energy consumption will considerably reduce such threats through
a reduction in the need for privileged access to energy markets.
Nothing in the GHG profile of the developing countries even remotely
reflects a threat to international peace and security though their
taking on GHG mitigation targets will adversely affect their
development.
25. To meet the twin challenges of energy security and climate
change India and the EU have an Energy Panel which focuses on
collaboration in clean coal technologies, nuclear energy, energy
efficiency and the petroleum sector. There is also a separate
India-EU working group under the Joint Commission dealing with
environmental issues.
26. As for the threat
from weapons of mass destruction to international security, we
believe that general and complete disarmament including nuclear
disarmament must remain on the international agenda. India’s
status as a Nuclear Weapon State does not diminish its commitment to
the objective of a nuclear weapon free world. Aspiring for a
non-violent world order, through global, verifiable and
non-discriminatory nuclear disarmament continues to be an important
plank of our nuclear policy that is characterized by restraint,
responsibility, transparency, predictability and a defensive
orientation. We maintain our voluntary moratorium on tests, are
ready to engage in negotiations in a non-discriminatory Fissile
Material Cut-off Treaty, and we enforce strict and comprehensive
export controls, which have now been harmonized with those of the
Nuclear Suppliers Group and the Missile Technology Control Regime.
We have scrupulously not transferred enrichment and reprocessing
technologies to countries that do not have them, and have supported
international efforts to halt their spread. Recent events have shown
that a new global consensus on non-proliferation is required, based
on an equal partnership of responsible states. As a responsible
nuclear power with impeccable credentials on non-proliferation, we
are ready to be a partner against proliferation, working closely to
create a new consensus on which to move forward.
27. Many of the
challenges I have described - terrorism, peace and stability in our
extended neighbourhood, proliferation of WMD, energy security and
environment – are integral to our discussions with the major powers,
and the European Union. The engagement between India and the EU
collectively, as also with its member states, notably France,
Germany and the UK, is intensifying on a number of strategic issues.
With shared democratic values and as multi-ethnic plural societies,
India hopes to be able to draw on the emerging cohesiveness of the
European perspective on major strategic issues. India and the
European Union are natural partners and factors of stability in the
present world order, and the UK is India’s natural bridge to the EU.
28. In sum, in our approach to emerging and larger security issues
worldwide, as new transnational threats emerge, fueled in part by
the informative age and globalization, a new mix of players will
be central to achieving our goals. In an environment where most
conflicts will be “low intensity” regional affairs, the real
challenge will be “winning the peace”, and marshalling and deploying
soft-power assets will be as important as “hard power” assets.
Beyond regional instabilities and conflicts caused by failed or
failing states, the greater problems are associated with the new set
of trans-national threats that grow in importance proportionately to
the progress of the informative age and globalization trends that
fuel them just as they drive economic expansion. Foremost among
these is the terrorist threat, from a new generation of
technologically empowered, globally mobile non state actors.
The International
Order
29. This
tour d’horizon from an Indian point of view suggests that we should
judge the efficacy or otherwise of the international order by
its success in dealing with terrorism, disarmament and
non-proliferation, energy security and the environment. Each of
these must be successfully addressed if India is to have the peace
and security she seeks for her own transformation. Unfortunately, an
honest appraisal suggests that the present global order has not done
very well when judged by this standard. It is because the old order
is not delivering that we are compelled to seek ad hoc solutions
like “coalitions of the willing” to contemporary security problems.
30. It seems to us that global security issues will need
multilateral solutions that are the result of a broad
participatory process. In seeking an enabling global political and
economic order, India has consciously sought to strengthen
multilateral institutions and mechanisms, particularly the United
Nations. More than 90,000 Indian troops and policemen have
participated in 43 UN peacekeeping operations.
31. If our
international institutions are not dealing successfully with the
challenges of today, one reason is the fact that they no longer
reflect current or emerging realities of power. The United Nations
has a structure which is completely outdated in terms of the
emerging global landscape. We are committed to the comprehensive
reform of the United Nations, including the Security Council,
which should reflect contemporary realities in its composition.
33. To conclude, there is a need to build new international
consensus’ to deal with non-proliferation and energy security.
At the same time, we should make truly effective and comprehensive
the existing regimes for climate change and to counter terrorism.
India is ready to work to build an enabling global order, based on
equity and reflecting emerging realities. We look to Britain and the
EU as partners in the shaping of the new approaches that a changing
world requires.
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